Charles B. Tripp

Charles B. Tripp
Autographed photo of Charles B. Tripp

Charles B. Tripp (July 6, 1855–January 26, 1930) was a Canadian-American sideshow performer known as the "Armless Wonder".

A native of Woodstock, Ontario, Tripp was born without arms, but learned to use his legs and feet to perform everyday tasks. He was a skilled carpenter and calligrapher and started supporting his mother and sister when he was a teenager. In 1872, Tripp visited P.T. Barnum in New York City and was quickly hired to work for Barnum's Great Traveling World's Fair. He worked for Barnum (and later James Anthony Bailey) for twenty-three years, then toured for the Ringling Brothers for twelve years.[1]

On stage, Tripp cutivated a gentlemanly persona and exhibited his skills in carpentry and penmanship. He also cut paper,[1] took photographs, shaved,[2] and painted portraits.[3] For extra income, he signed promotional pictures of himself with his feet. Tripp often appeared in photographs with Eli Bowen, a "legless wonder" from Ohio. In the photographs, the two rode a tandem bicycle, with Tripp pedalling and Bowen steering.[1]

By the 1910s, Tripp was no longer drawing large crowds for the major circuses, so he joined the traveling carnival circuit. He was accompanied by his wife, Mae, who sold tickets for midway attractions. Tripp died of pneumonia (or asthma) in Salisbury, North Carolina, where he had been wintering for several years. He was buried in Olney, Illinois.[1]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Robert Bogdan. "Tripp, Charles B." American National Biography Online. April 2004. Retrieved on July 24, 2008.
  2. ^ Francine Hornberger. Carny Folk. Citadel Press, 2005. 77.
  3. ^ Erin O'Connor. Raw Material: Producing Pathology in Victorian Culture. Duke University Press, 2000. 198.

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